The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) is scheduled to launch the asteroid explorer "Hayabusa2"1 on the H-IIA Launch Vehicle in 2014. The Hayabusa2 will arrive at an asteroid in 2018 to investigate it for one and half years, before returning to Earth in 2020.

JAXA will record and load your names, messages and illustrations on onboard devices (the target marker2 and re-entry capsule3) of the Hayabusa2.

Through this campaign and Hayabusa2's six-year space mission, we would like people to deepen their understanding of Japan's space probe activities.

1: The asteroid explorer "Hayabusa2" is a successor to the asteroid explorer "Hayabusa," which returned to Earth in June 2012. The Hayabusa2 will challenge a sample return mission by bringing sand from an asteroid to elucidate the origin and evolution of the solar system and raw materials of life while leveraging technology and experience acquired through the Hayabusa.

2: The target marker is a marking device for when the Hayabusa2 lands on the asteroid. The marker will be dispatched from the Hayabusa2 to the asteroid to stay there after arriving on the surface.

3: The re-entry capsule will be detached from the Hayabusa2 main body to return to Earth while protecting sample sands from the asteroid from high heat at the time of re-entry to Earth's atmosphere. The capsule plays the last important role for the Hayabusa2 mission by carrying sand back from the asteroid.